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Parliament has wide powers and opposition lawmakers often make public charges of corruption against Cabinet members, who are mostly hand-picked by the emir. Here, political battles standout in comparison with the country's Gulf partners such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, where public dissent is rare and is quickly muzzled. The current upheavals began in February elections, when Islamists and backers from sympathetic tribes took control of the 50-seat parliament. They quickly demanded key posts in the Cabinet and debated possible laws such as banning construction of new churches and mandating a death sentence for anyone convicted of blasphemy against the Prophet Muhammad. The emir later disbanded the opposition-led parliament and unsuccessfully tried to challenge voting district changes that appeared to give anti-government forces an edge. For months, Kuwait was without a working parliament. For the next election, however, the government has changed the electoral system from one permitting multiple ballots by each voter to a one-person-one-vote arrangement. Opposition groups claim this hurts them because they will not be able to form pre-election coalitions. They also say parliament should be the only venue to change voting rules. Al-Othman, the rights activist, said the move pushed some liberals to join the Islamist-led protests. "It's more important for me to fight a repressive government that refused to admit that the majority of the people have voted for Islamists," she said. Fay al-Qassar, a 25-year-old political science graduate who favors liberal causes, said she was angered by the crackdowns on last week's protest marchers. "I realized we have to be more proactive if we want things to get better," she said. Mohammed al-Dallal, a member of Kuwait's branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, claimed the Islamists do not seek to bring strict Muslim codes to Kuwait. But the now-disbanded parliament pushed for laws that demanded "modest" dress for women and sought to make Islamic law the exclusive source for all future legislation. "Our battle against autocratic rule can take years, but we will go with it," he said. Some liberal political leaders, meanwhile, believe anyone who broke ranks to join the Islamists will live to regret the choice. "This is not a fight for liberty," said Bassam al-Asoussi, a member of Kuwait's liberal faction the Democratic Forum. "In any revolution, three things should be present: demands for equality, liberty and justice. The opposition today is against these very things." Eman al-Bedah, another columnist for the Aljarida newspaper, said: "I don't think that they will clamp down the freedoms of the people. I know so. I am certain."
[Associated
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